Monday, September 28. 2015

The Catholic Church is perceived to be anti-science. That perception is completely false, of course. The Church is one of the few institutions left that actually looks at human biology and acknowledges the facts. And I am not just talking about the fact that a new genetically distinct human organism is created when fertilization is complete. (In layman's terms, new life begins at conception.)

In our hook-up culture, the Church also acknowledges that it is called the "reproductive" system not the "recreation" system for a reason. Biologically speaking, sex is not a recreational activity.

The Church is also one of few voices that warns about the dangers of surrogacy. Even if done altruistically, surrogacy turns women and children into objects: the woman is just an oven; the child is just a bun.

And yet, the biology of carrying a child in your womb simply cannot be denied. Those precious months are designed to have mother bond with child, even if the woman knows the child is not hers. The damage of severing that bond at birth can last a lifetime.

The UK's Daily Mail has published some anonymous confessions of surrogates that are quite illuminating. Even though these women know that they have to give the child away, they cannot help but become attached.

Friday, September 25. 2015

In the latest BioTalk, Chelsea and I discuss the use of fetal stem cells and fetal organs in medical research. This is an issue we cannot ignore. If we do, there will a generation of medical treatments, maybe even organ transplants, that will be supplied by abortions. Imagine a time when you, or a loved one, are faced with the horrifying reality that the life-saving treatment being offered came directly from the ending of an innocent life.

There are alternatives. We must demand that researchers get their "raw materials" from ethical sources, or we will have a medical system that is inextricably linked to the abortion industry.

Monday, September 14. 2015

New genetic engineering techniques are going to revolutionize medicine. They may also irrevocably change mankind if we are not careful.

No one debates using these new amazing techniques like CRISPR for individual patients to fight disease. The problem lies in the engineering of embryos. Why? Because in genetic engineering, it is not just the what, but the when that matters.

Any modification that is introduced early enough in development is a germ-line modification. That means a modification that is not just for that embryo, but for their children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, great-great grandchildren and so on. Genetically engineering embryos means genetically altering every generation after.

Many scientists around the world have called for a voluntary moratorium on using gene-editing techniques on human embryos, even for therapeutic reasons. They rightfully hold that such modifications are a step too far. As the head of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Francis Collins, explains:

The concept of altering the human germline [inherited DNA] in embryos for clinical purposes has been debated over many years from many different perspectives, and has been viewed almost universally as a line that should not be crossed.

Why, you might ask, is this a “line that should not be crossed”? There are many reasons, but I like to think of it like this. I am a parent. I have the legal and moral authority to authorize invasive medical procedures for my children. Yet germ-line genetic engineering would not just be for my child, but for my grandchildren, great-grandchildren, great-great grandchildren and so on.

Wednesday, September 9. 2015

It is rare in today's politically correct society that someone says what they really feel. So I applaud transhumanist Steven Fuller for telling it like it is. Unfortunately, his ideas are terrifying.

Fuller has a written a post, titled "We May Look Crazy to Them, But They Look Like Zombies to Us: Transhumanism as a Political Challenge" where he calls everyone who is not on the transhumanist train a "zombie":

So let’s be clear about who these naysayers are. They hold the following views:1) They believe that they will live no more than 100 years and quite possibly much less.2) They believe that this limited longevity is not only natural but also desirable, both for themselves and everyone else.3) They believe that the bigger the change, the more likely the resulting harms will outweigh the benefits.Now suppose they’re wrong on all three counts. How are we to think about such beings who think this way? Aren’t they the living dead? Indeed. These are people who live in the space of their largely self-imposed limitations, which function as a self-fulfilling prophecy. They are programmed for destruction – not genetically but intellectually. Someone of a more dramatic turn of mind would say that they are suicide bombers trying to manufacture a climate of terror in humanity’s existential horizons. They roam the Earth as death-waiting-to-happen.This much is clear: If you’re a transhumanist, ordinary people are zombies.

Thursday, August 27. 2015

I am sure this is resonating with moms and dads everywhere who are excited about the possibilities of genetic engineering. Parents want the best for their children. We spend money on swimming lessons, piano lessons, tutors, private coaches and the latest gadgets so that they will have an edge over the other kids. We want them to succeed.

But what about going beyond lessons and gadgets and actively giving children a genetic advantage with germ-line genetic enhancements. Sounds fantastic doesn't it? Having the smartest, fastest and best looking children on the block.

Logically, this is about as far as most people get before they say, "Sign me and my kids up!" But ask yourself what enhancing our children really means. It means being trapped forever in a dangerous biological game of "Keeping up with the Jones."

Wednesday, August 19. 2015

The hidden camera footage reveals the Indian restaurant is crowded, and the ambient noise of fellow diners all around makes it hard to hear. But Gianna Toboni, an investigative reporter from HBO’s documentary show VICE, slowly begins to understand what is being offered to her by a woman sitting across the table.

Toboni is in India to get a firsthand look at the country’s booming international surrogacy industry. She has heard rumors of “extra” Caucasian babies for sale, so she meets a surrogacy broker for dinner. On camera, the broker, holding a swaddled infant, tells Toboni she can take the baby home tonight — for a price.

The source of these “extra” babies is beyond horrifying. Western couples are taking advantage of the discounts international surrogacy offers. They get a baby gestated for them at a low price, and the women in third-world countries get more money than they could make in several years.

To make the process more efficient, doctors often transfer more than one embryo to a surrogate. If she gets pregnant with multiples, sometimes the commissioning couple is not told. Nine months later, they fly in and get the one baby they paid for. The “extras,” however, are peddled on the black market. While the couple thinks they’re getting a miracle at a bargain price, they are unaware that their “extra” children are being sold to whoever is willing to pay.

Thursday, August 13. 2015

As a follow up to yesterday's post at LifeNews on the biotech company Ganogen that plans to use organs from aborted fetuses for organ transplants, I found this Q&A on Reddit with Ganogen's CEO, Eugene Gu. It is very enlightening.

It is clear that Gu is concerned with ethics, as are the readers, but his and other's ethics are utilitarian. Gu repeatedly justifies using organs from abortion because the "tissue" is "medical waste" and therefore would be discarded. The reality is that we are all going end up being "medical waste." We do not permit the harvesting of organs where a human life is intentionally ended. Otherwise, we would be harvesting organs from death row inmates.

One reader does point out that Ganogen's advances will create an incentive for more abortions and possibly will create a system that exploits women. Gu dismisses the concern pointing out there are plenty of aborted fetuses to go around.

Gu also repeatedly mentions all of the research that is currently going on with fetal body parts procured from abortion. He also uses that as a justification. Evils of the past do not justify evils in the future.

Another reader brings up the fact that some fetal cell lines used in research today are "immortal" meaning new abortions are not needed to keep the cell line going. That is not the case with Ganogen's approach, but Gu still equates them morally.

What I find disturbing is that the majority of readers see no problem harvesting organs from the unborn and using them for others. It is a testament to how twisted our culture has become that the revelation that formed human organs are present at 17 weeks gestation does not make people realize that abortion is the taking of an innocent human life.

Here are some highlights from the conversation:

MorfolkMy understanding from the article is that you used organs of aborted fetuses to grow and mature. Is this the only process right now and do you have to rely on abortions?This seems like such a complicated ethical question! Does it impair your work?Eugene_GuMed Student | Duke University | Ganogen, Inc.[S]Yes, you are correct. We used organs from 17 week gestation human fetuses obtained from abortion procedures. It is definitely a complicated ethical question, but one way to view it is that we do not encourage abortions in any shape or form. If we did not use these organs, they would either be thrown into the trash or, more likely, used by other researchers to answer different types of questions. In fact, aborted human fetal tissue is used extremely frequently throughout all of science and industry. In the 1980s, Dr. Irving Weissman at Stanford transplanted aborted human fetal bone marrow, liver, and thymuses into mice to make the now famous SCID-hu or BLT mouse. This mouse was used in the first experiment to definitively show that HIV caused AIDS in humans. If you do a cursory glance in any major science journal, you will see that aborted human fetal tissue is routinely used. For example, the paper "Transcriptional landscape of the prenatal human brain" published in Nature used aborted human fetal brains for gene expression studies. In the New England Journal of Medicine and Science, several studies showed the use of aborted human fetal brains transplanted into human patients in an attempt to cure Parkinson's disease. Jonas Salk used aborted human fetal kidney cells to grow the polio virus in his quest to rid the world of such a terrible disease.In industry, the use of aborted human fetal products is even more prolific. There is a company called Senomyx which uses aborted human fetal kidney cells to test flavor enhancers for many famous companies including, until very recently, Pepsi.We believe that if human fetal tissues are going to be either a.) thrown into the trash, b.) used for basic science research, or even c.) used to research flavor enhancers, then it is perhaps the most appropriate to use them to directly save the life of another baby or child on the transplant waiting list. In this sense, we do not believe there are any ethical issues with our quest to save patient lives.kateishereWith the current moral arguments against abortions and how that effects the legality of abortion, let alone using the fetal tissue to grow organs, how long would we have to wait for this technology to be accessible after human trials?This is absolutely incredible and hopefully soon-to-be life saving work.Eugene_GuMed Student | Duke University | Ganogen, Inc.[S]Thanks for the support! Human fetal tissues have become such an integral part of science and industry both historically and currently that I do not believe there will be any barrier to using them in the future no matter which administration is in power. For example, in the 1980s, after Dr. Weissman created the SCID-hu mouse, President Regan tried unsuccessfully to ban that type of research. Now the SCID-hu mouse is widely used by many laboratories, including by the NIH in our own federal government even during the Bush era.

Up until last week Ganogen's website was upfront about the fact that their research used organs from aborted fetuses. The archived site is still available. But their new website stresses that they are non-profit and has removed any mention of aborted fetal organs. This is likely due to the exposure of the fetal body part market in the Center for Medical Progress videos.

What this indicates is that Ganogen is no longer comfortable letting the public know what they are up to. I have found this attitude all over the biotech industry. There are many educated elite who think the public should not be informed about such things. We should be ignorant for our own good. Case in point the following thread:

Morfolk Wow, thank you for such a detailed answer!I had absolutely no idea fetuses were used that frequently. Maybe there should be more educational info available to the general public on the issue.gentlemandinosaur I personally feel, at this time... that it would be a very bad idea to "educate" the public on this. It would only become more complicated and more controversial. I do not like it either... but, at this stage in human evolution... I do not feel the public is ready to accept this as a necessity to save human lives. But, this is only my opinion.retardcharizard Yeah. After reading that, my first thought was "How would I explain this to my catholic mother if I end up doing research similar to this?"Jigsus I am catholic and I support this. That material was going in the trash if it wasn't used for research.pocketknifeMTWhat momma don't know...

What is even more disturbing is the fact that Gu thinks we pro-lifers have situational ethics. He suggests we would drop our objections the minute we need an organ transplant:

tigersharkwushenWow, this is the kind of things that religious nut jobs probably don't know about but would make a big stink of it if they ever find out.Eugene_GuMed Student | Duke University | Ganogen, Inc.[S]That is unless one of them needs a transplant.

That is where all this fetal tissue research is going to end up. Pro-lifers will not be able to take advantage of medical advances because researchers choose to use material from abortions for their research. I, for one, reject that scenario. If researchers are looking to help the greatest number of people they should be trying to use materials that are without controversy. Apparently, they think we won't care in the end. They are wrong.

Wednesday, August 12. 2015

Will organ transplants be coming from aborted babies? They will if Ganogen Inc., a California Company, has their way. And Planned Parenthood and Stem Express will likely be partners in that chain that provides organs for transplant taken from aborted babies.

Ganogen’s vision to deal with the shortage of transplant organs is to the harvest organs from aborted fetuses and transfer them into animals to get them to grow large enough to use as a replacement organs for needy patients. Ganogen announced earlier this year that they were able to take a kidney from an aborted fetus and transplant it into a rat. That human fetal kidney was able to keep the rat alive for four months. Their research has been published in the American Journal of Transplantation.

Eugene Gu, the founder and CEO of Ganogen, told Medical Daily in an e-mail, “Our long-term goal is indeed to have these organs ready for transplant into human patients. However, that would require a large animal model such as a pig rather than a rat.” Medical Daily is clear Ganogen fetal kidneys came from aborted fetuses.

LiveScience also reports that Ganogen procured their fetal organs from Stem Express, the for-profit middleman that provides the tissue and organs “donated” by Planned Parenthood to medical researchers. Stem Express was mentioned by Deborah Nucatola in one of the explosive videos by the Center for Medical Progress that have exposed the market in aborted baby parts.

Tuesday, August 4. 2015

The Scientist recently ran commentary by John D. Loike questioning the ethics of transplanting human brains cells into other species. The piece entitled "When Does a Smart Mouse Become Human?" begins describing the research at the University of Rochester where mice were injected with glial cells from human fetuses. Glial cells are cells that support neurons in the nervous systems. The mice incorporated these glial cells into their brain and "outperformed normal mice almost fourfold in a variety of cognition tests."

The researchers stressed that the mice still had mouse brains, saying “This does not provide the animals with additional capabilities that could in any way be ascribed or perceived as specifically human. Rather, the human cells are simply improving the efficiency of the mouse’s own neural networks. It’s still a mouse.”

But the mixing of human brain cells with those of other species, especially those of other primates, raise serious ethical considerations. These issues are important and Loike discusses them.

What Loike does not discuss is ethical implications of the source of the human brain cells used in this research. The paper in Journal of Neuroscience clearly states that the glial cells came from second trimester abortions:

For xenograft of human fetal GPCs, cells were extracted from second-trimester human fetuses (18–22 weeks gestation age) obtained at abortion. The forebrain ventricular/subventricular zones were dissected from the brain, the samples chilled on ice, minced and dissociated using papain/DNase, as described previously (Roy et al., 1999, 2000), always within 3 h of extraction. The dissociates were maintained overnight in minimal media of DMEM/F12/N1 with 10 ng/ml bFGF. Samples were deidentified and obtained with the approval of the University of Rochester Research Subjects Review Board.

The explosive Center for Medical Progress videos have exposed the market in aborted baby parts. This is where some aborted babies have ended up: dissected, minced up and transplanted into mice.

I can confidently say that the mice did not need the human brain tissue as much as the baby did.

It is time to take our heads out of the sand. There is plenty of research that is being performed with aborted fetuses. In this case, scientists hope that this model model will help illuminate the contribution of glial cells to human neurological disorders. It is a noble goal, but the source of the glial cells morally taints all their research. They could have used cells from ethical sources like a natural miscarriage, but they did not.

We need to stop using tissue from abortion in research. If we don't there will likely be medical advancements that pro-lifers cannot in good conscience use because they are tainted with the blood of innocents.

Thursday, July 16. 2015

It has been several years since the height of the stem-cell controversy, where every day debate raged over the destruction of embryos for embryonic stem cells. These human embryos, conceived in a lab by the hundreds of thousands, are only days old but hold inside a mass of stem cells that scientists told us held the key to regenerative medicine.

These little lives, no bigger than the period at the end of a sentence, were deemed disposable, easily sacrificed to advance medical treatments for everything from paralysis to Parkinson’s.

In the great stem-cells wars, we learned that embryonic stem cells are immature and unwieldy, causing tumors in animal models. Adult stem cells, on the other hand, are more stable — and therefore safer for treating patients. As the years have passed, we have heard more and more about adult stem-cell successes and less and less about the failure of embryonic stem cells to become the cure-all many promised.

But the stem-cell wars are far from over. There is a third designation of stem cells that is little known but is gaining momentum: the fetal stem cell. Human beings are called embryos for the first eight weeks after fertilization. After that, we enter the fetal stage, which is from nine weeks post-fertilization until birth. Fetal stem cells are stem cells harvested during the fetal stage of development.

Fetal stem cells, often procured from elective abortions, are disingenuously classified as “adult” stem cells simply because they do not come from embryos. Needless to say, this creates great confusion, even causing pro-lifers to tout “adult” stem-cell successes when the stem cells originally came from an aborted fetus.

Hockey legend Gordie Howe was in the headlines this year for his remarkable recovery from a stroke after a stem-cell treatment in Tijuana, Mexico. Former San Francisco 49ers’ quarterback John Brodie also received the same treatment. Initially, the reports indicated that Howe and Brodie were treated with “adult” stem cells. Pro-life news feeds lit up with the news.

But enterprising USA Today sports reporter Brent Schrotenboer revealed last month that the treatment Howe and Brodie received from Stemedica Cell Technologies included stem cells derived from an aborted fetus.

Friday, July 10. 2015

I have acquaintances that a decade ago decided to adopt some “leftover” frozen human embryos created with in vitro fertilization (IVF). Presuming they were essentially adopting children, the couple first consulted an adoption attorney. Imagine their surprise when he referred them to a property-rights lawyer. In our state, human embryos are considered to be “property,” not people.

Back in 2002, a Rand Corp. report revealed that there were 396,526 frozen embryos in the United States. There are certainly many more today, and in many states, these little lives have no more legal worth than a house or a car.

This situation where we can legally own human life is a direct result of creating life outside of the body — outside of the loving embrace of husband and wife. Once human life is created in a laboratory, in bulk, ownership is suddenly an issue.

So who owns human embryos once they are created? The people who commissioned their existence. But what happens when those people disagree on how to dispose of their “property”?

Such a dispute has recently hit the headlines. Nick Loeb, an American businessman, and Sofia Vergara, an actress known for the T.V. show Modern Family, are locked in a legal battle over two female embryos the couple created together when they were engaged to be married. They created four embryos, with the intent of using surrogates to bring their children to term. Two attempts at impregnating surrogates failed. The couple then split up, leaving the lives of the last two girls in limbo.Continue reading at the National Catholic Register>>

Tuesday, July 7. 2015

In the wake of the Supreme Court ruling legalizing same-sex marriage for the entire United States, I have read a lot of commentary. None of it spoke to me as loudly as this post at AnonymousUs.org by a daughter of a lesbian mother and anonymous sperm donor. I post it in its entirety because I simply cannot bring myself to edit her raw emotion:

Children’s Rights? Anyone? :o(Submitted on: June 28, 2015

Ok. Now since gay people got their rights and can marry in the United States can we please start talking about children’s rights? Where are they? My mom is taking me to downtown NY for pride fest on Sunday. I’m going to be supportive that she can marry a woman if she wants. There’s going to be lots of gay dads and gay moms celebrating that they get the same rights as straight people but is anyone going to be talking about MY rights too?

Tuesday, June 30. 2015

No, this is not a joke or an onion parody. There is actually a man in Russia who has volunteered to receive the world’s first human head transplant (or body transplant, depending on how you look at it).

Valery Spiridonov, who suffers from a rare form of spinal muscular dystrophy called Werdnig-Hoffman disease, recently met with Italian Dr. Sergio Canavero who has agreed to perform the 36-hour operation. The procedure will also require Spiridonov to be put in a medically induced coma for 3-4 weeks.

Spiridonov and Canavero were recently in the United States — where Canavero has said he wants to do the surgery — presenting their case to the American Academy of Neurological and Orthopaedic Surgeons (AANOS).

In the latest episode of BioTalk, Rebecca Taylor and I talk about the ethical considerations of this and and other extremely invasive medical procedures, our tendency to treat mental diseases as physical diseases, recent comments from the Vatican on plastic surgery and how it relates to transhumanism and the importance of “bodily integrity.”

Monday, June 29. 2015

I am sure many of my readers have realized that I have not been writing as much lately as I have in the past. It is because I have been working on a very special project. Many of you may not be aware that I homeschool my kids and have been teaching homeschoolers in my area high school science for nearly seven years. I have discovered that my methods work. With only about 35 hours of total instruction, and no test preparation, all of my biology students that have taken our state's Biology End of Course (EOC) exam, have passed it. So I decided to make my materials available to other homeschooling families.

Over the past year I have been furiously working to translate my high school biology and chemistry classes into an online format. An insane amount of work has gone into my new website TaylorScience.

My high school level Biology and Chemistry courses include:

Pre-recorded weekly lectures with printable lecture notes

Weekly checklists to keep students on track

Weekly quizzes with answer keys

Monthly tests with full solutions

Extra material not covered in the text book

Extra homework problems and solutions

Extra experiments

Other online high school science courses can cost as much as $500 per student, and you have to follow their schedule.

I decided that I needed to make homeschool science affordable and flexible. $150 plus tax gives 12 month access to all my materials for the whole family. Students can work at their own pace. Families can take vacations when they want to with no need to worry about missing lectures or assignments.

I know that dollars for homeschooling curriculum are precious, and I know I have wasted valuable money on curriculum that did not work. So I have provided three weeks of my materials for free for families to try it out and make sure it will work for them.

Visit TaylorScience and check it out. If you know a homeschooling family, share it with them. I pray it will be a valuable resource for those who need it.

Monday, June 22. 2015

Hockey legend Gordie Howe was in the headlines this year for his remarkable recovery from a stroke after a stem cell treatment in Tijuana, Mexico. Initially the reports indicated that Howe was treated with "adult" stem cells, and so the implication was that his treatment was non-controversial. But Brent Schrotenboer, of USA Today, reported last month that Howe's treatment included stem cells derived from an aborted fetus.

Stemedica, a San Diego company that provides the stem cell treatment to clinics like the one in Mexico, combines two types of stem cells -- meshenchymal stem cells from an adult donor and neural stem cells from a 14 to 16 week old aborted fetus. Stemedica claims that fetal stem cells are "adult" stem cells because they behave more like true adult stem cells than embryonic stem cells. USA Today reports:

The company, Stemedica Cell Technologies of San Diego, says calling them "adult" stem cells is scientifically correct because they are considered more mature stem cells with a specialized function, as opposed to embryonic stem cells, which are more akin to "blank slate" cells that are considered riskier and more likely to cause tumors....

"We don't use the word fetal too much," said Maynard Howe, Stemedica's CEO, who is no relation to Gordie Howe. "We just don't want to get people confused about what it is. They're really considered legally adult stem cells even if they're fetal-derived."

Unfortunately, this is not new. Scientists and companies like Stemedica often call stem cells that come from aborted fetuses "adult" stem cells simply because they did not come from an embryo.

Stemedica's silence on where they got their stem cells has caused great confusion. Confusion they are not eager to correct,Continue reading at LifeNews>>

Thursday, June 18. 2015

The New York Times has a piece this week about the conundrum of what to do with all of the "leftover" embryos created with IVF that are in the deep freeze waiting to get a chance to finish their lives. The Times estimates that there maybe over a million by now. A million lives on ice created as surplus children in a mass-human manufacturing campaign.

Except "leftover" is no longer the most appropriate word to use to describe frozen IVF embryos. Why not? Well "left-over" implies that the embryos were created in a batch for a particular couple and the couple now has more embryos than they want to use. Kinda like leftover lasagna. Some of it gets eaten and then rest it put in the freezer. (The callous comparison is on purpose because frankly many people think nothing more of putting their embryonic children in anti-freeze and then into cold storage than they would freezing their left-over lasagna.)

"Unused" is a better term because some of the frozen embryos are not "left-over." These embryos are intentionally created from desirable sperm and egg donors and then sold. They are not "left-over." They are the primary merchandise. The Times has the details:

The clinic buys eggs and sperm from donors whose profiles are likely to have broad appeal — like those who are tall, thin and well educated — then combines them to make embryos that are doled out to three or four families. Both the donors and the would-be parents know the embryos will be used by multiple families

For $12,500, patients get three tries, from a different batch of embryos each time — and a money-back guarantee for those who do not achieve a 12-week pregnancy.

“Our clients are typically people at the end of the line in terms of having a baby,” Dr. Zeringue said. “We used to have a regular donor embryo program, but the waiting list kept getting longer and longer, and in six years, we had less than a dozen donors.”

Who says IVF has not turned procreation into a major life purchase like a house or car? Money back guarantee? On children?

I agree with this guy:

“Make no mistake, this is commodification,” Andrew Vorzimer, a Woodland Hills, Calif., fertility lawyer, posted in his blog. “These are not donated embryos. Rather, they are embryos created from donors hand-selected by California Conceptions. It is one step removed from a mail-order catalog. The only difference is that the product being sold is nascent human life.”

And he is part of the industry!

I cannot help feeling sorry for the kids who will have likely have several siblings, maybe in their own area, that they will never know. Tragic. I truly hope the news that they were created in bulk from the gametes of total strangers and then sold will not devastate them. I know it will crush some.

It really is time for society to stop turning its back on the abuses of the fertility industry. We think we are making the world a better place because a precious few actually get born. We can celebrate the lives of IVF children, but we cannot ignore how the industry has totally cheapened procreation and turn it into human trafficking.

Wednesday, June 10. 2015

For the last few years, scientists have been warning us that genetically modified children are just over the horizon. Rumors have been flying around that laboratories are already using a revolutionary new gene-editing technique called CRISPR to try to change the genes of human embryos.

Advanced gene-editing techniques like CRISPR hold great promise for treating or even curing genetic disease in existing patients that need it. But in genetic engineering, it is not just the what, but the when, that matters. Any genetic modifications done at the embryonic stage are considered germ-line modifications, meaning those genetic changes will be incorporated into reproductive cells and will be passed down from generation to generation.

Prominent researchers have called for a voluntary moratorium on using CRISPR technology in human embryos, even for therapeutic purposes, because of the inherent risk to multiple generations. They rightly argue that gene editing in humans should only be attempted in therapeutic cases where any modifications cannot be passed on.

The Catholic Church agrees. In Dignitas Personae, a clear line is drawn between gene therapy that is for a single patient and germ-line modifications that can be inherited. Not only is it unethical to create and manipulate human life in a laboratory, but Dignitas Personae states, in regards to human germ-line modifications, “… it is not morally permissible to act in a way that may cause possible harm to the resulting progeny.”

Unfortunately, the rumors surrounding the use of CRISPR technology to genetically modify human embryos have proven to be true.

Scientists in China have published results of their experiments into editing the genes of leftover in vitro fertilization embryos that were deemed nonviable because of genetic abnormalities. Led by genetics researcher Junjiu Huang, the Chinese attempts were, by all accounts, a failure. Out of 86 embryos that researchers tried to modify, only 71 survived.

Of those that survived, 54 were tested to see if the genetic engineering worked. Only four embryos showed evidence of the intended modification, an editing of the gene responsible for a blood disorder.

Overall, there was evidence of what The New York Times called “collateral damage,” meaning unintended mutations in other parts of the genome caused by the attempted genetic engineering. The Times reported, “The Chinese researchers point out that in their experiment gene editing almost certainly caused more extensive damage than they documented.”

Thursday, June 4. 2015

I have said many times that for transhumanists to have their technological utopia on earth, they need to sell Christians on the idea that radically changing ourselves into something other than human is part of God's plan for us.

There have been more and more articles on how Christians need not be wary of transhumanism. We are told we need to be part of the movement so that we are not left out of the conversation. In essence, we are told we need to make friends with the devil so we can have his ear.

I found the latest at Christian Post this morning. Rev. Christopher Benek, associate pastor of Family Ministries and Mission at First Presbyterian Church in Ft. Lauderdale, wrote a post titled, "Why Christians Should Embrace Transhumanism" where he argues that we should not take the term "transhumanism" so literally...

Wednesday, May 13. 2015

It sounds like something out of a Philip Dick novel but it isn't. Zoltan Istvan is running for President of the United States, not as a Democrat or Republican, but as a Transhumanist. He started the Transhumanist Party to get radical technology into the political realm. He is charismatic and articulate. Last year he wrote a piece for The Huffington Post detailing why he is running for office. Here are some highlights:

In addition to upholding American values, prosperity, and security, the three primary goals of my political agenda are as follows:

1) Attempt to do everything possible to make it so this country's amazing scientists and technologists have resources to overcome human death and aging within 15-20 years--a goal an increasing number of leading scientists think is reachable.

2) Create a cultural mindset in America that embracing and producing radical technology and science is in the best interest of our nation and species.

3) Create national and global safeguards and programs that protect people against abusive technology and other possible planetary perils we might face as we transition into the transhumanist era.

To the undiscerning eye these may seem like reasonable goals, but reading between the lines I find them to be problematic, to say the least.

Friday, May 8. 2015

In the UKDaily Mail Christopher Gyngell, a research fellow in neuroethics at Oxford University, argues that we are morally obligated to use new DNA editing techniques like CRISPR, which can precisely edit the human genome, to cure genetic disease. He asserts that we must test the technique in human embryos with the hope of eradicating mutations that cause disease. He writes:

Although the reality of human genetic modification may be a surprise, we should resist making any knee-jerk reactions or judgements.Unfortunately this is exactly what has happened.Many, including the world’s most prestigious scientific journals, have labelled this research as unethical and called for a worldwide moratorium on it.But far from being wrong, the research on human gene editing is ethically imperative.

Then he argues that resistance to using these techniques in human embryos are the result of “bad arguments, empty rhetoric and personal interests.” He concludes, “It is a time for reason, not emotion.”

Ignoring the fact that in the last sentence Gyngell mentions the “booty” (as in plunder) that the UK can reap if it moves ahead in the editing of human embryos, I would like to bring some “reason” to the discussion.

In one sense Gyngell is absolutely right. We do have a moral imperative to use CRISPR technology to help patients with genetic disease. But he does not make an important distinction that I will. It is not just how genetic engineering is done that matters. The when is very important as well.

Gyngell sets up a scenario where to help heal genetic disease, the only way to do that is to tinker with human embryos. This mean that any edits made to the embryo’s DNA will not just be for that embryo, but for that embryo’s children and grandchildren. Making a modification so early in development means the change will be incorporated into the germ cells (sperm and egg) of the child. This means future generations would be forced to carry that modification as well.

The Chinese scientists who recently attempted to modify the DNA of human embryos reported that in several places mutations occurred where they were not intended. If a child is born with unintended mutations introduced in the embryonic stage, they could not help but pass those on to their children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren.

Gyngell blithely dismisses the unforeseeable affects of using CRISPR so early in human development. He writes, “Just because something has unpredictable effects doesn’t mean it should be banned.” I think Gyngell forgets that there are generations of people that will have to live their wholes lives subjected to the “unpredictable effects” of the intentional genetic engineering performed on their ancestors. We are talking about human beings, whole families, here not lab rats.

Gyngell is right that CRISPR does have great potential to relieve suffering and do great good, but human embryos are not the only humans we can use CRISPR on.

Instead of messing around with human life in its earliest and most vulnerable stage and possibly introducing unwanted mutations that will be inherited from generation to generation, we can use CRISPR on existing patients with genetic disease. The modifications made on children and adults would not be ones that would be passed on. The genetic engineering would be for that one patient minimizing risks to a single generation. We can have the benefits of CRISPR technology for genetic disease without the risk to future generations.

The objection to using CRISPR technology in embryos is not an emotional one as Gyngell implies. It is a reasoned one based in the long standing right of patients to have informed consent. Parents can legally consent for their own children. But do we morally have the right to consent to invasive genetic manipulation for our grand-children, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren?

We can use CRISPR ethically and safely to help patients living with genetic disease now without subjecting future generations to risky genetic modifications that may go very wrong.

To me it seems the emotional argument comes from Gyngell. He wants to forget the real dangers and move forward regardless. His way makes generations into genetic experiments. I am sure there are lots of medical advances we could have if we treated human subjects unethically. This is one of those times. Are we going to subject generation after generation to genetic experimentation or will we use techniques like CRISPR to heal patients living with genetic disease now? I believe the latter is the more reasoned approach.

Tuesday, April 28. 2015

For nearly a decade, I have been trying to warn pro-lifers about the advent of genetically-modified, designer babies. Society’s total blind acceptance of creating human life in the laboratory en masse with IVF has now brought us to this very precarious point. Scientists in China have taken left-over IVF embryos and tried to edit their DNA with a new promising gene-editing technique called CRISPR. It was not a success.

Monday, April 20. 2015

After tremendous pressure from consumers on Facebook, Twitter and by email, Hershey’s announced that it will remove all ingredients from genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in its chocolate.

Hershey’s follows other food giants like Nestle, General Mills, Unilever and Post Foods, which are removing GMOs from their products because the public, wary of the health risks of so-called “Frankenfoods,” is rejecting, loudly and relentlessly, genetically modified food.

Meanwhile, there is a perfect storm brewing that will deliver designer genetically modified children in our own lifetimes. Two fronts are converging to create a potential disaster, and there is little notice from the general public.Continue reading at the National Catholic Register>>

Thursday, April 9. 2015

Just when I think I have seen it all, something like this flies up and hits me right between the eyes. A California company, Ganogen Inc., started by some very young medical students, is trying to end the shortage of organs for transplant. It is the way they are going about trying to solve this problem that is horrifying.

Ganogen takes organs from aborted fetuses and transplants them into rats so that the organs can continue to grow to a size where they can be transplanted back into humans.

Its like an early version of The Island with a splash of The Island of Dr. Moreau sprinkled in for good measure.

Wednesday, April 1. 2015

International surrogacy is often touted as a win-win situation. Western couples get a baby gestated for them at a low price, and the women in third world countries get more money than they would normally see in a lifetime.

But all we rich western countries have to do is look a tad bit closer and the whole facade falls apart. The women are exploited by signing contracts they cannot read, are kept under lock and key, forced to deliver by cesarean section, and then not paid the full amount they are promised. Some women die. Many of the contracting western couples simply do not care, since they are getting a baby at a discount.

But the exploitation does not stop there. In a shocking piece of investigative journalism, HBO’s documentary show VICE has uncovered even more disturbing details. To maximize results, these surrogates are often implanted with multiple embryos. If the couple only wants one child, any “extras” born are sold on the black market, and these couples have no idea their children are being sold to the highest bidder.

Friday, March 27. 2015

It is very possible that the United States may follow the United Kingdom's lead and sanction the genetic engineering of future generations using technologies that create human embryos with the genetic material of three people. If Americans do not express our concern over these "mitochondrial replacement" (MR) procedures, which are very similar to the cloning technique that produced Dolly the Sheep, I fear MR will soon be offered by fertility clinics here.

If you need some back ground on MR watch this BioTalk video where Chelsea Zimmerman and I discuss MR and how the UK has just approved GMO children.

NMBarry at CatholicStand has posted a call to action. She reports that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has asked the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to convene a committee to discuss mitochondrial replacement. The committee is taking public comments. Please let them know how you feel about the genetic modification of future generations. You can e-mail them at MitoEthics@nas.edu.

Here is the letter I wrote to the committee. Please feel free to use any or all of it. Just please let them know what you think!

Dear Committee on Ethical and Social Policy Considerations of Novel Techniques for Prevention of Maternal Transmission of Mitochondrial DNA Diseases:As a citizen of the United States, I write to express my concern about the genetic engineering techniques collectively called "mitochondrial replacement" or "mitochondrial donation."These are misnomers because these techniques are really oocyte or embryo modifications where the nucleus is replaced, not the mitochondria. These techniques are very similar to somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) better known as cloning and carry with them many of the same risks. Several scientists have expressed their concern over the safety of such invasive procedures, and they worry about the health of the resulting children.I understand the desire for parents to have genetically-related children, but at some point we must be responsible and limit parental desires, favoring instead the health and well-being of the next generation. Mitochondrial replacement (MR) is the intentional modification of children to have the genetic material from three persons. It would also create a germ-line modification; one that would be passed on to future generations.Many other technically-advanced countries have banned germ-line modifications for good reason. The line that prevents the experimentation on the next generation, and every generation after, without their consent should never be crossed. There are likely many medical advances we could have if we treated human subjects unethically. I believe mitochondrial replacement falls into that category.Any girl that is conceived with this technique could not help but pass this modification onto her offspring. If there are any deleterious effects, which have been noted in animal studies, she would be placed in the very same position as her mother, struggling with a desire to have genetically-related children, but wary of passing on her modification. The difference is that she would know she was the product of germ-line experimentation sanctioned by the FDA.Time has proven that the slippery slope in reproductive medicine is very real. IVF, a technique originally designed to help infertile couples conceive, has expanded to a billion dollar industry catering to the desires of the fertile as well, with a menu of choices including sex selection. MR is being proposed in the United States as a treatment for infertility. Note that the focus has already shifted from the child's well-being to that of the prospective parents. The child bears all the risk in genetic engineering that would be used to fulfill parental desire.If we allow mitochondrial replacement to proceed to the clinic, it will only be a matter of time before modifications to nuclear DNA will be attempted. With the lack of federal laws regulating the fertility industry, in a few decades, a similar menu of genetic modifications, no doubt, will be available to prospective parents.Please keep the focus of mitochondrial disease research on treating patients and not on germ-line genetic engineering. As Americans become more wary of genetically modified organisms in their food supply, understanding that such modifications have unintended and possibly unhealthy side effects, it would be unthinkable to move forward with the genetic modification of our children and grandchildren.

If you are in the Washington DC area you can make your opinions known in person. The meetings are March 31 and April 1, then again May 19. The registration deadline for public comment during the March 31 and April 1 meetings is today! Register here.